1st Edition

The Foodways of Hawai'i Past and Present

Edited By Hi'ilei Julia Hobart Copyright 2018
208 Pages
by Routledge

206 Pages
by Routledge

206 Pages
by Routledge

Offering diverse perspectives on Hawaiʻi’s food system, this book addresses themes of place and identity across time. From early Western contact to the present day, the way in which people in Hawaiʻi grow, import, and consume their food has shifted in response to the pressures of colonialism, migration, new technologies, and globalization. Because of Hawaiʻi’s history of agricultural abundance,... Read more

Introduction: ‘Local’: Contextualizing Hawai‘i’s Foodways  1. Homegrown Cuisines or Naturalized Cuisines? The History of Food in Hawaii and Hawaii’s Place in Food History  2. Snowy Mountaineers and Soda Waters: Honolulu and Its Age of Ice Importation  3. Dairy’s Decline and the Politics of "Local" Milk in Hawai‘i  4. Customary Access: Sustaining Local Control of Fishing and Food on Kaua‘i’s North Shore  5. Cultural Traditions and Food: Kanaka Maoli and the Production of Poi in the He‘e’ia Wetland  6. Farmer Typology in South Kona, Hawai‘i: Who’s Farming, How, and Why?  7. From the Sugar Oligarchy to the Agrochemical Oligopoly: Situating Monsanto and Gang’s Occupation of Hawai‘i 

Biography

Hi’ilei Julia Hobart is a Postdoctoral Fellow in Native American and Indigenous Studies at Northwestern University, USA. Her work looks at the points of intersection between foodscapes and indigeneity. She is especially interested in the history of commodity ice and refrigeration in the Pacific, the development of new technology in the nineteenth century, the affective registers of comfort and home-making, and indigenous embodiment and environmental knowledge.